As I drove along listening to this disc the following adjectives sprang to
mind: charming, disarming, beguiling, whimsical and gamine. Can music be said
to be ‘gamine’ I then asked myself and checked its definition
which is said to mean mischievous, teasing or sexually appealing and since
when I thought of it I had in mind Audreys Hepburn and Tautou I knew that
it was what I meant. To sum up, what it boils down to is that this
music is quintessentially French. With the odd exception it is immediately
recognisable as being French and in fact couldn’t be anything else.
What is it that makes music so indelibly linked to a country I ask myself.
I find it difficult to come up with an answer. Up until I heard this disc
I would have listed such composers as writing quintessentially French music
as including Debussy, Satie, Jean Françaix, George Auric, Milhaud,
Poulenc and various others to which list I can now add all 15 of the composers
represented here the bulk of whom I had never before come across.

The disc is a hugely enthralling and enjoyable celebration of ‘joie
de vivre’ and is one of those discs you never tire of hearing - a tonic
when you’re in need of being cheered up. There is an appealing innocence
about the music that cannot fail to charm and I loved every minute of it.
Part of its success is due to pianist Cyprien Katsaris’s clever choice
of programme as well as his ability to bring out every wistful nuance underpinned
by an obvious love for the music. His enjoyment in playing it comes across
very forcefully. I am loath to pick out any particular piece because that
would leave out the others when every track has its own highly attractive
and distinctive features. However, if I had to pick one to give a flavour
of the playful and fun nature of the disc it would have to be track 16: Galop-Marche
à 8 mains sur un seul piano (for 4 players at a single piano).
No wonder it brought the house down at a Radio France Festival; can you imagine
the shenanigans caused by four pianists trying to do their bit and needing
to leap around amongst themselves causing convulsive laughter from the audience.
That sums up the nature of the disc which is a celebration of the fun side
of music. It doesn’t always have to be serious. It can let its hair
down yet still warrant being taken seriously. That this is something
understood the world over was also ably demonstrated by Katsaris’s own
arrangement in medley form of several French film music themes. This gained
huge applause from the Japanese audience.

The music on this disc is another way of proving that music can be light in
nature without being classed as ‘light music’. This is a winning
disc in every respect and I now have an enviable self-inflicted task of seeking
out more music by these wonderful composers to add to the growing number of
those whose music I don’t know enough of; oh, for more time!